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Impromptu To a Bluebird
Impromptu. To a Blue Bird,
Singing on a cold frosty morning, after several warm days.
- Come hither, sweet bird, the cold wind hath harmed thee,
- Come warm they chill'd limbs, and partake my repast;
- A few sunny days from the covert have charmed thee,
- As hope told thee, falsely, the winter was past.
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- Thy song of the spring a sweet foretaste has given,
- Of delights ever new, ever smiling and gay,
- Of young buds, and fresh flowers, and the soft blue of Heaven,
- The rich verdure of earth, and the warm airs of May.
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- In thy fate, hapless bird, O! 'tis plain to discover
- An emblem of life in its early spring morn,
- When the young heart comes forth with hope glowing all over,
- And shrinks at the touch of the cold world's chill scorn.
- Myra. February 19, 1824.
March 12, 1825. Cincinnati Literary Gazette 3(11): 88.